Friday, September 12, 2025

For Their Own Sake

Earlier this week, I came across an article where the author professed her enjoyment of romance novels. What struck me was not her taste in books but that she felt compelled to justify it, as if liking romance fiction required an apology or a dissertation. So, she argued that romance novels aren’t as vapid or devoid of substance as people might assume and that, in fact, many contained hidden depths, social commentary, and so on. I don’t doubt that’s true in some cases, but the whole exercise struck me as unnecessary. Why does any form of entertainment need to be dressed up in the language of higher meaning before it’s considered legitimate? Why can’t we just say, "I like this because it entertains me?"

This is something I think about often when it comes to the pulp fantasy literature I've championed on this blog since its beginnings. For decades, critics and fans alike have strained to rationalize their enjoyment of the pulps. They talk about how Robert E. Howard tapped into archetypal myth or how Fritz Leiber’s stories critique modernity or how Edgar Rice Burroughs anticipated later trends in speculative fiction. In a great many cases, this is, in fact, true, but I can't help but feel like it misses the point.

The pulps – and the stories published in their pages – existed to entertain. That's it. They were meant to fill idle hours with adventure, color, and excitement. They’re not sacred texts or secret manifestos and that’s fine. In fact, that’s more than fine. It’s wonderful.

I first started reading the stories I term "pulp fantasy" sometime after I first discovered Dungeons & Dragons. I would have been just on the cusp of my teen years – 10 or 11 years-old. I didn’t come to those stories because I wanted mythological resonance or literary depth. I came to them because the covers promised daring escapes, sinister sorcery, and faraway places unlike anything in my everyday life. For the most part, those stories delivered on their promises. Conan’s Hyborian Age, Leiber’s Lankhmar, and Burroughs’s Barsoom all burned themselves into my imagination not because they taught me something profound about the human condition, but because they were fun, fast, and unapologetically larger than life.

There seems to be a peculiar pressure to make sure our amusements are "worthy" of our time. Movies, books, and even roleplaying games are expected to carry some moral, political, or psychological weight. If they don’t, we’re told they’re “just entertainment,” as though that were an insult. Despite that, I find great joy in admitting that sometimes, I just want to read about sword-swinging barbarians, evil wizards, and lost cities with no greater purpose than escape.

Escapism itself isn’t a flaw. It’s one of literature’s oldest and most valuable functions. People have always turned to stories to be transported elsewhere, to forget the mundane for a while, and to inhabit another world. There’s no shame in that. If anything, I’d argue it’s essential, especially in times when the “real world” feels oppressive, difficult, or even just dull.

Of course, pulp fantasy stories can contain deeper meanings if you want to find them. Almost anything can, if you look hard enough. However, the fact that you don’t need to, that you can simply enjoy the ride without demanding justification, is, I'd wager, part of what gives them enduring power. When I pick up a yellowed paperback of Conan or Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser, I don’t feel guilty that I’m not wrestling with Dostoyevsky or Proust. I’m not reading them for enlightenment. I’m reading them because they’re fun.

Fun should be reason enough for anyone.

10 comments:

  1. I think it’s a bit presumptuous to assume that the author of the article defended romance’s potential to “serious literature” because she was ashamed to enjoy “mere entertainment”. She might have felt no shame at that, but still was ticked off by the assumption that it was all the genre was capable of. Think about it like this. I’m a huge fan of comics. Lot of people assume that all comic books are superheroes. And while I love superhero comics, I’m understandably miffed when people reduce a medium that I love to a single genre.

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  2. Jim Hodges---
    An honest outlook amid many valid points.

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  3. Well, that’s the way i feel about reading Gor. They’re fun. And if they’re fun why should i feel ashamed about it? Take that, Bullmer/Akers

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  4. why not both?
    https://gamebooks.org/Series/196/Show

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  5. Great post James. I used to feel compelled to justify many of the things I liked, during the early years of the transition to "adulthood", when we all try to cast off the trappings of childhood and prove we're grown-ups with very grown-up tastes. For a time I now look back on with grim embarrassment or at least disappointment in myself, I felt like I was too sophisticated and smart to just enjoy imperfect media for its own sake. I have always loved many things far more "high brow" than a Conan story or a Thundarr cartoon or a Godzilla movie and for a time I went to school in pursuit of mastery over some of those Higher Forms of Art - but during those years I tried to eschew many of my favorites or to do cartwheels to justify them to myself and others. Thankfully, I do not make the mistake so often anymore. I am glad I realized one day that entertainment is there to entertain, and the things I like may not be the things you like, and there's no sense losing sleep over how people perceive my intellect and maturity by the media I consume for entertainment (presuming it isn't inherently harmful in some way). Life is too short and, at times, too tough, to deny ourselves every smile, laugh, and drop of enjoyment we can wring out of the dang thing.

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  6. Agree with 99% - while I was shy about my RPG and fantasy book interest for a while in the low teens, I got over it. Reading is important, and reading for fun is a great way to build communication skills. I'll even say the S. Meyers of the world do a great service (even if there are clear downsides to the work).

    However...:
    "The pulps – and the stories published in their pages – existed to entertain. That's it. They were meant to fill idle hours with adventure, color, and excitement. They’re not sacred texts or secret manifestos and that’s fine. In fact, that’s more than fine. It’s wonderful."

    This is where I'll disagree a little bit. They were *published* to entertain, that's it. But many of them - particularly Howard and Lovecraft of my experience - *existed* to allow the writers to explore things that were important to them. To call out to things they thought were lost, or not yet found, and that is, I think, what fueled their greatness. They were talented writers with a passion driving their work, and without both sides of that we probably wouldn't be talking about them today.

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  7. "Why does any form of entertainment need to be dressed up in the language of higher meaning before it’s considered legitimate?"

    Such behavior is not limited to entertainment. People dress up everything they do in the language of higher meaning because it satisfies their need for a purpose. For example, much of the “work” going on at the office is just oversold and overwrought process concocted so that people can look and feel important. Surely, you’ve seen people there throw themselves into trivial projects as a form of escapism.

    On that note, here’s a true story to illustrate my point. In 1999, business and government were obsessed with the pending impact of Y2K. News programs talked about it incessantly. Government agencies contracted out 100s of millions of dollars to ensure they were Y2K compliant. NATO scolded Italy for having done nothing to prepare. We were on the precipice of a disaster, claimed the newly famous consultants.

    As a young software developer, I was tasked to test a particular computer program that accounted for 10s of millions of dollars to see if it would in some way fail when we crossed from 1999 into the year 2000. I completed and thoroughly documented that task, with numerous screen shots and excerpts of code, in about three hours. My boss then informed me that I had to make this project last for three months! That was the length of the contract. We were saving the world from imminent doom.

    Meanwhile, happy-go-lucky Italy got through the whole mess unscathed with very little effort and even less spending.

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  8. "There seems to be a peculiar pressure to make sure our amusements are "worthy" of our time." From whom?

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  9. That's one of the reasons I don't use the term "guilty pleasures" as often as I used to. Whether it's a "lame" musical artist, a "hollow" film, or a questionable genre of fiction, what's there to feel guilty about? We like what we like, pure and simple, and there's little sense being embarrassed or defensive over it.

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